na | sate acai —— pi SEE > BIRTHDAY s HE, with her sweet &: young enthusiasm, ¥% THE! CHRIST CHILDS 8 ATE PRESENT. SER @* he 2) By MAY C.RINGWOLT. to Him. Not far away is a great hos- pital for little children who have | child of old, and how His birthday | for it rested in fascinated awe upon ing away the tears, she was soon skipping along in the sunshine, thinke ing what a lucky girlie she was to have two lively legs, and a straight, strong back. Agnes remembered the time, be- fore dear father’s death, when they we lived in a cunning cottage of their slipped timidly in. For a moment own om a preity avenue, but now | Agnes stood dazed, as if she had sud- mother and she-had only one room| gen)y entered fairyland, forthe bare | at the top of a gloomy house On a] L115 of the room were festooned forlorn back street. Still, as her feet | 4itn heavy ropes of Christmas greens, clattered up the dark, uncarpeted | the shades at the windows were stairs, her heart was full of happiness ! drawn, and all the chandeliers bril- because she had reached home at, niy lighted, while above the await- last—for even one room Is home ing manger shone a glorious electric when mother is there. star. Then, ashamed of being so late, “Oh, mother,” exclaimed Agnes, | she hurriedly tiptoed to her place, “I've so much to tell you!” And|the vacant seat beside Clarice. cuddled ih mother’s lap, an argg about| Clarice met her with a cold stare, her neck, a hand patting herscheek; | put the gaze of Agnes’ eyes never Agnes sweetly prattled of the Christ | reached the unkind little girl's face, was to be kept by giving presents toa vision of beauty in Clarice’s arms. poor, sick little children left in His| It was a doll such as fairies might place. “And, mother,” she cried, dream of. She had dark, clustering “I'm going to give a doll just like [curls, and magnificent brown eyes. my own dear Peggy! Do you think, | Her cheeks glowed with color, and Sore Selfish Men Lose Righteous Will Be Remembered by Things t They Have Forgotten. Fy President Arthur T. Hadley of Yale. 006600060664 [FE is full of things that are worth having, but which Wwe AODOHOSE 4 4 4 4 4 < told them of the|crippled legs and arms, and poor, first Christmastide [crooked backs, sick children who — of the Christ|can’t run and play, but have to hobble Child cradled in the manger because there was no room e Christmas carol of peace and good will sung by the an- gels to the shepherds watching their flocks by night. Clarice’s face was rapt; her eyes adoring. Of all the teachers in the Sunday-school, none was so lovely as her own Miss Maud. She was certain that the Christmas angels had the game shining yellow hair. Did they X/ I bX . 3 : vk a ro Ab My £ “P A ¥ % ft Bn AF 7) 2 Ah “SN q/ Bel Sf & | 88 2 7 3 | brown figure shrinking back into a | corner. YO 5 : SNE wear those fascinating gold hairpins, too? One was slipping out from the goft fluff over Miss Maud’s left ear. If only she dared tell her! But that morning she had asked the awful privilege of holding Miss Maud’s muff —a, rich sable with a beautiful bunch of violets fastened to it—and there was no courage left for further inti- mate speech. Suddenly the spell was broken, and Clarice turned with angry jerk from the object of her worship, and fiercely scowled at an inoffensive little girl seated beside her. % “Excuse me,” meekly apologized Agnes, the new scholar. Clarice drew her light blue silk skirts away from the dingy. brown cashmere touching them; held herself very straight; and, with a superb dig- nity, sniffed the violets on the muff. “And now, my dears,” said Miss Maud, “as you know, Wednesday will be another birthday of the Christ Child, and who wants every one here to give Him a present—just as you would give a present to your own little brother on his birthday at home.” She smiled radiantly. “Do you wonder how you can do that when the Christ Child has become a King in Heaven? I'll tell you. He left in His place all the poor little girls and boys in this big world, and- told us that in giving to them we give about on crutches or lie in bed all day. Wouldn't you like to make their Christmas so happy that they'd forget their pain?” Her smile gathered up their eager nods of assent, as a golden thread gathering pearls. “I knew you would. Well, I'm going to tell you a secret.” She leaned confidentially near. “The day before Christmas we're to have a dear little service down here, and over there on the platform will be an empty manger, and, as we sing our Christmas carols, we are going to march up to the manger and each put in a gift for some little Christ child at the hospital. Won't we have a jolly time deciding what to bring! Why,.it will be almost as exciting as if every girlie of you were playing Santa Claus!” Again Clarice’s smiling face was clouded by a scowl, and one rude elbow poked the new scholar’s arm. “Clarice!” exclaimed Miss Maud, severely. “Qhe’s crowding me!” defended a sulky voice. Miss Maud looked up at the little The child’s eyes were lumin- ous; her face flushed, her lips parted. «Agnes was so intently listening to me that I'm sure she didn’t realize that she was leaning against anyone. I'm surprised at you, Clarice!” A cheek hid its shamed crimson in the soft muff. To have Miss Maud “sure prised” at you was ignominy itself? Her tears wet the violets. It was all Agnes’ fault. She would never for- give her—never! And when Sunday-school was over and Agnes, with a timid smile, asked if she might walk up the street with Clarice, that unladylike little girl slipped her arm through that of her chum, Anabel, and, whispering and giggling, stalked by Agnes without a word. The tears came into Agnes’ eyes, for mother would not let her play with the little girls in the new neigh- know—you could get the dressed in time?” The smile faded from mother’s lips, and the arm about her girlie trembled. “My dear: little Agnes,” she murmured, with a catch in her voice, “mother is so sorry to disap- point you.” She paused, then brave- ly went on. such a little woman that mother is You know, dear, for three whole weeks mother had no work to do.” “Yes,” chimed in Agnes, “and it was just beautiful! me the lovelist stories.!” mother dear—if I sewed, too, you |there was the cunningest dimple in dollie | her round chin. “Agnes has grown to be | lets dangling over: her hands. going to explain: everything to her. | your little hospital girl be pleased?” fully whispered back Clarice. gaily, | don’t suppose I'd give my best doll We took | away! long walks, and, in the evening, in: |out a box of jack-straws—“Lady Lu- stead of the stupid sewing, you told | cile and I simply stopped in.” She airily tossed her head. “But, love,” explained mother, with | our way to a Christmas Eve party.” = HANGING THE STOCKING. She was dressed in claret velvet trimmed in white silk, and wore a claret velvet poke bonnet with white silk strings and an ex- quisite white plume gracefully touch- ing the brown curls on the right side. And best of all, she had a necklace of gold beads, and gold bead brace- “Qh,” murmured Agnes, “won't “My little hospital girl!” scorn- “You Here’s my present”—she held y “We're on a sad smile, “when there is no work there is no pay—no money to buy anything to eat nor coal to keep us warm.” “ «We ate every day, though, mother dear, and most generally always we had a fire.” “Yes, dear, because a kind man let us have all that we needed, and trusted mother to pay for it when she got work again. So, you see, Agnes, the money that mother is making now does not really belong to us, but every cent must go to pay our debts.” A small head solemnly nodded. «It hurts mother very much not to give her darling any Christmas toys nor let her girlie’s kind heart have its wish about the dollie for the poor sick little child at the hospital, but Agnes will try to be a good little girl about it, won't she?” The arms about mother’s neck tightened their hold, but Agnes’ mouth twitched, and she had to blink very hard to keep back the tears. If she had no present to lay in the borhood into which they had moved, because the children there were rough and boisterous, and used naughty words, and she was very lonely. But she was a brave little soul, and dash- THE ANGEL AND tidings of great joy. THE SHEPHERDS. Albert Edelfelt. Jnd the angel said unto them, Fear not; for, behold, Fk bring yom good Christmas manger, how would the Christ Child know that she loved Him? “Of course,” she argued to herself, “I could ’splain in my prayers that I had nothing to give.” But had she nothing? Her face suddenly crimsoned, and 2a great lump choked her little throat. There was Peggy herself! Without speaking, she got down from mother’s lap, and darted across the room to her little bed. There, propped up by a pillow, sat Peggy in a stiff pink calico dress... The curls had all been combed out. of Peggy's straggling hair; the roses had long ago faded from her cheeks, and in a sad accident Perry had parted com- pany with the end of her nose. “You dear!” whispered ‘Agnes. Her lips formed -a determined line. How could she have thought of giving Peggy up! What would she do all day without a dollie to play with? What would she do at night without a dollie to sleep on the pillow beside her? But how disappointed her sick little girl at the hospital would be Christmas morning when all the cther children had lovely presents, and she found that she had been left out? + Agnes stooped over the bed, gathered Peggy in her arms, and pressed her to her aching heart. * * *® * * * x It was the day before ©Ohristmas, and the children had sung all but their last carol which they were to sing as they marched to the manger and laid down their gifts one by one. The door softly optned, and a little brown shadow of a girl with a small “Form in line, my dears,” inter- rupted Miss Maud, briskly. “Yes, our class comes last, but you must sing all the time we’re marching.” PV YVYIYVeY 1. o Oe d. POV V shall never have if we devote our time to thinking about them. ’ : Happiness is worth having, but the man who spends his days planning how to be happy defeats his own end. Pub- lic office is worth having, but the man who occupies his life scheming how to get office loses the chance of public ser- vice. which makes that office honorable. Culture is worth having—almost infinitely worth having—but the man who sets out to make culture his primary object usually ends by being either a prig or a sham. Somehow or other the conscious seeking of a good thing, if kept up too long and too constantly, interferes with the chance of obtaining it. What Christianity does is to put a man in the way of realizing the right kind of ambitions instead of the wrong kind. It warns us against seizing the shadow and letting go the substance. It gives us a scale of values which helps us against mistakes of judgment. : : A man with whom ambition is the dominant motive—a man, who, in the language of the text, seeks great things for himself,—is liable to three kinds of mistakes; mistakes of dishonesty, mistakes of selfishness, and mistakes of judgment. His life may be insincere. His life may be selfish. POPOPPPV ALLEL SA PPPOVYVY --- A hundred minor acts of courtesy are unnoticed by thé man who does them. If he is trying to judge his own character he thinks chiefly of the in- stances where he has consciously sacrifieed his own interests in order to do something for others. But if the world is judging his character it will think less than he does of the $100 which he did or did not put into the contribution box on Hospital Sunday, and more than he does of the hundred times that he left his neighbors a dollar richer because he nad a habit of doing business fairly, or the hundred times that he cheated his neighbor out of a dollar by business habits which he, in his own mind, gives no ‘harsher name than shrewdness. The better the world is the surer it is to take these last things into account. : ® : If there is one moral lesson which the Gospel iterates 4nd reiterates, it is the importance of these unconscious eourtesies or discourtesies, these un- 1 conscious honesties or dishonesties. ; In the Day of Judgment the wicked will be condemned not for the great sins which they have committed, but for the little serviees which they have 1 1eft unrendered. The righteous will be distinguished not by the great deeds which they have remembered, but by the little deeds that they have for- gotten. The one thing that grows greater as time goes on is the heroic character which men have achieved by not seeking great things, but simply doing daily duties without knowing it until they hvae achieved the power to meet any emergency that might arise. \ dofeteeieioiolaoloini Fiemme a jojo eg HAT a great misfortune this is, the habit of considering the weather!—of thinking that we must consider the weather. It is largely due, is it not, to clothes? No mention is made of rain in the Garden of Eden; put we must not, therefore, contend that rain was disagreeable and omitted; we must recollect that Adam and Eve did not need to consider rain; furthermore, in blessed ignorance, they did not know that it was anything to be considered. To mind the rain no more than the May sunshine, but to plunge into it and let the drops pelt as they will; to accept snow without a thought of discomfort, but, rather, to enjoy the thronging presence of it; to pursue one’s daily stint regardless of whether the sky be dun or blue,—this is a state which we, especially of the cities, long, long have lost. We regain it, some of us, in the wilderness camp, where we hunt, or fish, if the day be dark or if the day be bright. And where we find that the dash of the soft rain on one’s face is not death, after all; that wetness and dryness The children’s voices caroled joy- ously as thé procession pressed for- ward, but one little singer was mute. She was the last in the line, a little brown shadow of a girl with a small pink object hugged to her breast. Miss Maud stood by the manger, DOW heaped with all sorts of playthings, and nodded and smiled as each wee member of her class approached. Puzzled, she watched Agnes pause, look at the manger with frightened eyes, and hesitate. Then she saw the small pink object lifted to the child’s lips, and heard the sound of a smacking kiss of farewell before trembling hands laid a doll with straggly hair, faded cheeks and a broken nose among the new toys. “Why, my dear,” cried Miss Maud, putting her arms about Agnes, “what is the matter?” A great sob shook the tiny figure. «Tell me all about it,” comforted Miss Maud. . And Agnes brokenly confided the whole story. how mother’s money belonged to somebody else, and how she had noth- ing to give the Christ Child except her only doll, neither of them noticed a little listener who drew nearer and nearer. - “No, no,” cried Agnes, “I wouldn’t take her back.s I want the little hos- pital girl to have her—she’ll ’preciate Peggy’s crippled nose, won’t she?” Agnes forced a smile through her tears. “Only,” she faltered, “it will be so—so lonesome without any doll—ie.” Something tugged at Miss Maud’§ skirts. She turned, and with a start of surprise, looked down into Clar- ice’s eager face. “I’ve lots more at home, you know,” she whispered. And, laying Lady Lucile in Agnes’ astonished arms, Clarice ran after her chum, Anabel.—The. Interior. [For Family of Twos Oyster Soup, Gherkins.” Roast Dury Apple-and-Celery Salads * Potatoes, Scalloped, with Grated Onion Squash. Plum Pudding, Hard Sauce. pink object hugged to her breast 8 bop os or dangerive Oranges. Grapes. Coffee, Nay — = =a ET a — i ‘Gou_is Born His Dap in Y¢ it of Daido Sbiour ch is Uhrist THe Lio PO. But as she explained i are merely relative terms. All the centuries of fussing and fuming with the weather have not affect- ed the weather one partiele; it still rains, and snows, and sleets, and blows, just as dictated by circumstances. Therefore, what’s the use? Are your puny diatribes, or mine, of any greater potency than those of others gone before? Evidently not; accordingly, try the plan of being friendly with the weather—of agreeing with it instead of fighting it—and, ’pon my word, pres- ently it will be agreeing with you.—Lippincott’s. o og oddly : oc [De Burn Aimost as Fast As We Build } gy F. W. Fitzpatrick. Sts HE cost of fire and its accessories, in round numbers, is Just about an even $600,000,000 a year. It may be but a peculiar justment, that with all our phenomenal growth and the tre- mendous boom and vast amount of building carried on in some years, the most active year we have ever had in building construction netted just $615,000,000's worth of buildings and alterations during the twelve months. So that with all our vaunted activity, we produce in money value only a trifie more than what we destroy. Worse than that, in the first month of the present year our losses by fire were over $24,000,000, and during the same time we expended but $16,000,000 in new buildings and repairs. Our average fire loss is $19,000,000 a month—a “normal” month. But the confla- gration risk is such that we nave “abnormal” months with startlingly normal regularity. In February of 1904 Baltimore raised that month’s figure to §90,- 000,000, and in April of 1906 San Francisco added $350,000,000 to the “normal” month’s loss. In five years’ time the total has been $1,257,716,000. No other nation on earth could stand the drain, and even we are beginning to feel it.— McClure’s Magazine. Gegelege ele RdeR fel deielodolrdololeiolod doled Cmte pr ym Pharaoh the Oppressor This Is the Rameses Who Looms Over the Egypt of To-Day. POV VOVIVIPT 2000 00a se POPIPIOIVIVY By Robert Hichens. . - 2 ———— | a cloud, a great golden cloud, a glory impending that L will not, cannot, be dissolved into the ether, he (Rameses) loomed over the Egypt that is dead, he looms over the Egypt of today. Everywhere you meet his traces, “every- ——————-1] where you hear his name. You say to a tall, young Egyp- tian: “How big you are growing, Hassan!” > He answers: and I shall be like Rameses the Great.” wen Or you ask of the boatman who rows you: “How can you pull all day against the current of the Nile?’ And he smiles, and lifting his brown arm, he says to you: Great.” This familiar fame comes down through some three thousand two hun- dred and twenty years. ‘Carved upon limestone and granite, now it seems view of itself upon the minds of millions. Pharaoh who oppressed the children of Israel.—The Century. i § § i g 3 We and the Weather § > By Edwin L. Sabin. S 3 coincidence, or perhaps it is an unconscious economic ad- ,¢ pal Ppumpresmnind § “Come back next year, my gentleman, ° “Look. I am as strong as Ramesges the a engraven also on every Egyptian heart that beats not only with thle movement . of shadoof, or is not buried in the black soil fertilized by Hapi. Thus can inordinate vanity prolong the true triumph of genius, and impress its own” Thais Rameses ik believed to be the Wiv in son trict © examp way i about. a well to $20 higher lages ‘Ameri Scor of a d dense centre bowed tore s] of ang ings w eviden men throug vis the intens seeing far en ft was fined ly for neck : disma displa The brated thirtie salist Myrtl her p at M: chape and b Bruce in it d years Bes Mrs. gomp] She h of all flow ¢ and 1 Qushi fry a Mrs. The const. gdien bad i bring dren. ious 1 tt £, ew O sery “Py - rs 0 th ust le besid offing wom za, fi write abou pape: fount to dc adjus suite es it wron until er o fails ore little agai dash gives recti the s it as goes pen | tuse